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Building Cultural Sensitivity Through Classroom Technology

When I was a young kid, education was had little more appeal to me than the black and white text and the superficial, smiling faces of the cartoon illustrations in my Maths text book smiling back at me. The truth is, everything that I ever studied in a text book, regardless of the context of the subject being taught, never seemed to have any real world application (with the exception of modern history, of course).

As a student, one thing I appealed for was a little dose of reality. Something I could take out of my logic-building subjects and apply within a real world context, and shape a macro-conscious understanding of the world that we are all born into.

It may seem a little strange that I think this way, but I know I’m not the only one out there. Throughout life’s journey, we begin to meet a lot of different people, from different countries, with different backgrounds, ideals and opinions. For example, upon my most recent trip to America, I shared a cab with a middle-aged man from Florida, in the sunny South. When I told him from Australia, after setting aside the quizzical and humorous trivialities, he proceeded to ask me about our culture. One thing that got my attention was, “Hey, don’t you guys still have cannibals to the north or something like that?” I did nothing but stare back in astonishment at what I had just heard. I sat there thinking,”is this guy for real?” but as it turns out, he was. Anyway, after settling a gross misconception about the cultures residing in Australia, it made me think, what do they really teach people in schools? I mean, I for one, was brought up to believe that people in the deep south of America were all ‘rednecks’. After seeing it myself however, I then realized the folly of my original assumption. In fact, I felt stupid. The people in the deep south of America were lovely, their hospitality amazing, their personalities humble and unassuming. It made me think hard to myself, was I at fault, or was it because my school had never instilled me with a little bit of cultural sensitivity. It must not be misconstrued that I am inferring to race, because I’m not, I’m just illustrating the point that at my school in Australia, we were never really given any true insight into the surrounding cultures of the world because we never had the resources.

I reckon, with a little dose of reality, my subjects could have had a more gravitational impact on me by keeping me engaged via a real-world contextual adaptation of the subject matter. After trawling the web recently out of part curiosity and the other part boredom, I came across this little gem: the interactive whiteboard.

If you’re not familiar with the technology, a fair summary of its function and purpose is that it is an interactive touch panel, with the ability to run interactive ‘lessons’ in which the student can use their sense of touch to navigate, have fun and most of all, learn. So, how does this type of technology illustrate my above point? Well, I came across this unique yet bizarre application of interactive whiteboard technology. An interactive whiteboard lesson, mathematics, to be exact, introducing young students to pictures of the real world around them - parts of which, they may never have known even in their wildest dreams! Not only are students building upon powerful, essential mathematical logic, but they are also tacitly learning about the housing situation in Mozambique, the types of brick houses that they have in Uganda, and the types of communities in South Africa. The children engaging with this marvelous technology are subconsciously adopting a sense of cultural sensitivity at a young age via the impactful medium of touch-sensitive information technology.

So what does this mean? Well, aside from the obvious value of children being able to engage with their subject matter, it also brings about the destruction of trans-continental apathy. When they see similar images on the news, the pictures that they see will already tell 1000 words because they’ve established a geographical and cultural understanding of their surrounds. Man, did I ever wish I could have been introduced to that type of thing as a kid!

What are your thoughts? Do you see the integration of cultural learning into mainstream subjects via technology beneficial for the development of values in schools? Or do you see this type of learning combination as an impediment on traditional educational methods?

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If Web 2.0 were that easy, we would have done it already!

Let’s get straight into it, shall we? The internet is a powerful, impressionable and highly malleable corporate playground that will forever change shape to fit the culture of those who use it. The internet, althought young, is a shape-shifter. A prime example of such shape-shifting is highly prevalent in the existing Web 2.0 aesthetic. For the oblivious readers, Web 2.0 is essentially just a colloquial term to describe a movement from first generation internet to the second (obviously), but this little transformation entails a different emphasis on the way the web conducts itself. Web 2.0 emphasises usability, and usability means simple designs and heightened functionality. In summation, a lot of good has come out of it but there has also been a lot of garbage as well.

I’m sick of reading articles and blogs emphasising how easy it is to achieve absurd levels of success through web 2.0…  If web 2.0 were that easy, we would have all made millions and would have done it already. It is in this simple, yet astute observation that we can siphon through the Web 2.0 dumping ground to uncover a couple of simple truths.

Firstly, from a technical point of view, Web 2.0 is a complete paradox of itself. How? Well, people want simple designs but with heightened functionality. Sounds easy, doesn’t it? Not really… Programmers (not so much designers) and their innovative ability are being pushed to their limit in putting together the cogs that power such ‘simple’ designs. This is unquestionably great for the development of the internet, but yeah, it’s a tiresome effort!

Secondly, ‘making money’ on the internet involves the sheep-like following of highly ambiguous ‘success’ formulas that seem to do nothing more than contribute to the mass of cyber-pollution that seems to be building a larger ball of garbage that is perpetually hurling faster and faster down the slopes of the Web 2.0 mountain. I’ll tell you the truth about these formulas, as they all have a hidden, underlying message that many people seem to surpass in their absorption of regurgitated content. When someone on the internet says “Buy my book, it will teach you how to build a following on twitter” what they actually mean is “hey, I’m making money off of the folly of of uneductaed users buying their way into Web 2.0, you should too by publishing your own crappy e-book and baiting it to the flock.” I guess you could say that the most notorious offenders in this category of Web 2.0 fall under ‘social media’, but they are the users abusing it incorrectly. Social Media is the best thing that happened to the internet, however like all existing media avenues, there are ways to abuse it to your own advantage. Companies and individuals are more than entitled to use social media to advertise, because they actually offer a service or product on the internet - hell, I’m even going to link back to one of my clients at the end of this post. The thing is, though, offering a genuine product or service isn’t preying on your average Joe Blow of Web 2.0, who doesn’t know their left foot from their right foot by saying that making money on the web is easy - cos it’s not.

Making money involves hard work, and ingenuity. Not every person possesses the same level of innovation as others out there. I for one, am sick of seeing certain bloggers and designers, mass marketing the simplicity of innovation to hordes of readers entranced by the success of other people. Tell it like it is. Look at it this way, if you want to know how a car runs - Do you analyse the body or the engine? Bloggers need to be more informative about the gearing of Web 2.0, rather than coaxing people to buy into the deception of its ‘simplicity’. Omitting the mechanics of your online success only makes the garbage ball bigger.

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